Leg Ulcers

Chronic leg ulcer is an open lesion between the knee and ankle joint that remains unhealed for at least 4 weeks

Aetiology

  • 60-80% venous - due to venous blood stasis
  • 22% arterial - manifestation of peripheral vascular disease
  • 5% diabetic - diabetes impedes the normal stages of wound healing
  • Other rare causes include autoimmune vasculitis (e.g. associated with rheumatoid arthritis, SLE), tropical disease and TB
  • Often multifactorial
  • Prevalence increases with age

Pathophysiology

Arterial ulcers

  • Caused by insufficient blood supply due to peripheral vascular disease

Venous ulcers

  1. Elevation of venous pressure in the legs e.g. by abdominal obesity which resists venous return from the legs
  1. Veins dilate and valves become incompetent, varicose veins develop
  1. The increased hydrostatic pressure in the vessels results in red blood cell leakage into the tissue resulting in swelling, haemosiderin, pigmentation and inflammation (due to breakdown products) i.e. venous (stasis) dermatitis
  1. The skin cannot heal well due to poor blood supply, so begins to break down
  1. Venous insufficiency also acts as a risk factor for DVT/PE

Clinical presentation

Clinical features of venous ulcers

  • Most venous ulcers (87%) occur in the gaiter area
  • Ulcers are shallow, exudative and warm
  • Other signs of venous insufficiency may be present such as ankle swelling, varicose veins, haemosiderin deposition, venous eczema and lipodermatosclerosis
notion image

Clinical features of arterial ulcers

  • Arterial ulcerations tend to affect the foot
  • The ulcers usually have a punched-out appearance
  • The ulcer and the surrounding skin are cold, white and shiny
  • Other signs of peripheral arterial disease may be present such as intermittent claudication
  • Pain may also occur at rest, usually at night when the legs are elevated and this is relieved by hanging feet off the end of the bed
  • Peripheral pulses may be absent

Investigations

  • Assessment of ulcer - record position and measure surface area
  • ABPI - establish if there is arterial disease
  • Wound swab - only if ulcer increasingly painful/exudate/malodour/enlarging
  • Bloods - FBC, LFTs, U+Es, CRP
  • Patch testing - to ulcer treatments e.g. bandages, dressings, creams
  • Duplex scan if indicated to rule out arterial disease

Management

Arterial ulcers

  • Management is by reducing modifiable risk factors - treat hypertension, prescribe statin, prescribe antiplatelet

Venous ulcers

  • Aim to heal simple venous ulcers by 12 weeks
  • Control pain
  • De-sloughing agent if necessary
  • 4 layer compression bandaging - may need to increase compression gradually if pain a problem
  • Leg elevation
  • Other options for difficult wounds - wound bed preparation
    • Autolytic - the use of dressings to create moist wound environment and hydrate necrotic tissue or eschar (hydrogen, honey)
    • Sharp debridement - with scalpel or scissors
    • Biological - larvae therapy
    • Surgical - under general anaethetic